The Mesoscale Order of Nacreous Pearls
ORAL
Abstract
A pearl’s distinguished beauty and toughness are attributable to the periodic stacking of aragonite tablets known as nacre. Nacre has naturally occurring mesoscale periodicity that remarkably arises in the absence of discrete translational symmetry. Gleaning the inspiring biomineral design of a pearl requires quantifying its structural coherence and understanding the stochastic processes that influence formation. By characterizing the entire structure of pearls (~3 mm) in cross-section at high resolution, we show nacre has medium-range mesoscale periodicity. Self-correcting growth mechanisms actively remedy disorder and topological defects of the tablets and act as a countervailing process to long-range disorder. Nacre has a correlation length of roughly 16 tablets (~5.5 µm) despite persistent fluctuations and topological defects. For longer distances (> 25 tablets ~8.5 µm), the frequency spectrum of nacre tablets follows f-1.5 behavior suggesting growth is coupled to external stochastic processes—a universality found across disparate natural phenomena which now includes pearls.
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Presenters
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Robert Hovden
University of Michigan
Authors
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Robert Hovden
University of Michigan
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Jiseok Gim
University of Michigan
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Alden Koch
University of Michigan
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Laura M Otter
Australian National University
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Benjamin H Savitzky
Lawrence Berkeley National Lab
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Sveinung Erland
Western Norway University of Applied Sciences
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Lara A Estroff
Cornell University
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Dorrit E Jacob
Australian National University